Referring to the canonical Your answer is in another castle: when is an answer not an answer?, it's an answer. It's not a good answer, but it's an answer.
Here's one example from the above that makes me say that:
Shog9's test is basically: Strip the markup, and if what remains is an attempt to answer the question, even if badly, then it's an answer. So stripping the markup from the answer you flagged:
Very safe: (link to article about) Random_UUID_probability_of_duplicates
The first two words are an answer. They're not a good answer, but NAA isn't about good or bad or complete or incomplete.
Now, if it were:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UUID#Random_UUID_probability_of_duplicates
That would be NAA (and a bad answer). Strip the markup and you're left with:
(link to article about) Random_UUID_probability_of_duplicates
Tells you nothing. Does the article say it's safe? Not safe? We don't know.
It's a bad answer that should be fixed (I think it has been now), but it's an answer.